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ComicFill

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Posts posted by ComicFill

  1. On 3/9/2022 at 1:25 AM, Mecha_Fantastic said:

    First, strike 99% of these losers off the 'influencer' register. They ain't influencing mess. 

    Then go from there. 

    I think you underestimate how much affect a person can have. I've seen it happen. Guy with only a couple thousand followers posts a video about a spec book that is the first appearance of a minor charter that he theorizes would be a perfect addition to an MCU show coming up. Then all of a sudden that book at a CGC 9.8 goes from selling for around $100 to having several sales over $300 with multiple bidders. Enough sales happen that it becomes the FMV. Only takes 3 or 4 auctions to completely change what a book trades at.

  2. On 3/9/2022 at 1:57 AM, Stefan_W said:

    This is true as far as it goes, but I would also add the impact of the Marvel movies has made a massive difference. For good or bad, the success and continued of the MCU has pushed the comic market from being largely flat to one where there is continual growth at least in some titles. 

    For sure MCU has taken it to the next level. But I would argue CGC was elevating comic collecting and saving the hobby from the 90s nosedive for several years before Iron Man came out.

  3. On 3/9/2022 at 7:08 AM, William-James88 said:

    Just go with "youtubers"

    But it isn't just youtube. It is instagram, facebook, and tik tok too. I know the word "influencer" is gag inducing, and reminiscent of a kardashian, but that is what they do. They influence. I've seen lots of variants or releases or obscure keys on an instagram post or a youtube video that made me decide to get it. Hell, I jumped on the Iron Studios X-men Diorama because I saw a preview video a youtuber did and now I'm $10k into it. Without that youtube video I might not have even know that it existed.

  4. On 3/8/2022 at 3:33 PM, Gregd said:

    Funny how I heard comic collecting was dying 20 years ago… yet records are still being set in 2021/2022. Also heard several years ago how GA collectors were all old men who would be leaving the market soon and prices would be back to the sub $100 mark (where they were before they went up so many years ago).

    All I know is that the PCH books I bought 5-7 years ago have had a great run. Glad I didn’t listen then. So did the silvers and bronzes.

    I am sure there are over bloated parts to the market but not sure we will see many of the iconic comics of the 40s-70s become worthless. 
     

     

     

    CGC saved the comic collecting hobby in my opinion. Without grading companies I don't think we would have nearly the interest there currently is.

  5. On 3/8/2022 at 7:20 PM, Krydel4 said:

    The majority of them are more about the investing/speculation side of the hobby than current storylines, character studies, upcoming comics etc. The channels I've found that do talk about those aspects are hosted by older collectors. The pics are just 4 examples of the videos that came up when I typed "Comic Books" into YouTube search. 

    Screenshot_20220308-211653_YouTube.jpg

    Screenshot_20220308-211644_YouTube.jpg

    Screenshot_20220308-211639_YouTube.jpg

    Screenshot_20220308-211628_YouTube.jpg

    For SURE a lot is speculation. But that is also because that's what gets clicks. Some of these guys are just in it for business. Others are genuine geeks who love and read comics but want youtube subscribers so they put out some spec videos as well.

  6. On 3/7/2022 at 3:53 AM, DavidTheDavid said:

    If new releases are tanking, what happens when the vintage frenzy cools, too? What's the pivot then? Not a fair question, I know, but it does make you wonder.

    Speaking broadly, there's a lot of great work being done in comics today, but ya, the cover prices are such that average collectors have to be choosy. 

    It's speculators. That's why all the older stuff is skyrocketing. People are buying it up so when the character gets a movie or TV show the resale value goes up. Those people don't actually read comics, so they don't buy new stuff. 

  7. On 2/28/2022 at 9:13 PM, 500Club said:

    My impression has always been that the stamp collecting demographic was much older…?

    For sure. Stamp collectors are dying off without new collectors coming in. Same thing happens with things like dolls, silver, China, etc.  You can watch antiques roadshow or whatever and see the prices are plummeting. The comic community is still young and expanding. 

  8. I've been collecting for 25 years and this always bothered me. I like my various runs isolated in their own boxes and often times a shorter series won't fill a box, or it will have plenty of empty space as I complete the run. I used to fill boxes with old novels. It worked pretty well, but they were heavy and they shifted around in the boxes.

    Then one day I bought a big sheet of insulation styrofoam and cut it down to sheets that fit my comic boxes. It worked so perfectly I contacted a styrofoam manufacturer and had sheets produced. I'm now using around 250 sheets in my collection.

    It's been such a good solution that I decided to produce a bunch of them and start sharing them with the comic collecting community. They are light-weight, sturdy, and provide even pressure to keep your comics upright and secure. 

    If you're looking for the best solution i've found in 25 years you can check it out at comicfill.com

    Let me know what you think.

     

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